That 'Alien Megastructure' is Not Shooting Alien Laser Beams at Us

“The hypothesis of an alien megastructure around KIC 8462852 is rapidly crumbling apart,” Douglas Vakoch, President of SETI International and an author of the paper said in a statement. “We found no evidence of an advanced civilisation beaming intentional laser signals toward Earth.”

The observations that ruled out this idea were made on six nights between October 29th and November 28th at the Boquete Optical SETI Observatory in Panama. This observatory’s telescope is highly attuned to tiny, pulsed signals — as short as a billionth of a billionth of a second — such as those our future alien overlords might send our way if they wanted to forewarn us of the coming invasion. (Well, technically, they would have been warning the Roman Empire: those signals take about 1,500 years to reach Earth).

The star known as KIC 8462852 first hit the public radar in October. Astronomer Jason Wright casually suggested that its irregular, flickering pattern, much unlike anything else we’ve observed with the Kepler space telescope, might be explained by an alien megastructure, a swarm of giant space panels built to harness the entire energetic output of their star. It’s a twist on the classic Dyson sphere concept, first proposed by Freeman Dyson decades ago.

The notion electrified the media and the public, mobilising a worldwide search for additional signs that KIC 8462852 might be the bright beacon that ends our cosmic loneliness. That search has proceeded very quickly, and the results have been resoundingly clear: this star ain’t got aliens.

As I reported back in November, astronomers using the Allen Telescope Array in the Cascade mountains conducted a thorough search for narrow and broadband signals, which would indicate the technobabble of an advanced civilisation. They found nothing of interest. Now we know that the fabled aliens swarming KIC 8452852 aren’t trying to communicate with us via laser pulses, either.